<h2><SPAN name="chap42"></SPAN>CHAPTER XLII.</h2>
<p>Mr. Mellaire was right. The men would not accept the driving when the
<i>Elsinore</i> won to easier latitudes. Mr. Pike was right. Hell had not begun
to pop. But it has popped now, and men are overboard without even the
kindliness of a sack of coal at their feet. And yet the men, though ripe for
it, did not precipitate the trouble. It was Mr. Mellaire. Or, rather, it was
Ditman Olansen, the crank-eyed Norwegian. Perhaps it was Possum. At any rate,
it was an accident, in which the several-named, including Possum, played their
respective parts.</p>
<p>To begin at the beginning. Two weeks have elapsed since we crossed 50, and we
are now in 37—the same latitude as San Francisco, or, to be correct, we
are as far south of the equator as San Francisco is north of it. The trouble
was precipitated yesterday morning shortly after nine o’clock, and Possum
started the chain of events that culminated in downright mutiny. It was Mr.
Mellaire’s watch, and he was standing on the bridge, directly under the
mizzen-top, giving orders to Sundry Buyers, who, with Arthur Deacon and the
Maltese Cockney, was doing rigging work aloft.</p>
<p>Get the picture and the situation in all its ridiculousness. Mr. Pike,
thermometer in hand, was coming back along the bridge from taking the
temperature of the coal in the for’ard hold. Ditman Olansen was just
swinging into the mizzen-top as he went up with several turns of rope over one
shoulder. Also, in some way, to the end of this rope was fastened a sizable
block that might have weighed ten pounds. Possum, running free, was fooling
around the chicken-coop on top the ’midship-house. And the chickens,
featherless but indomitable, were enjoying the milder weather as they pecked at
the grain and grits which the steward had just placed in their feeding-trough.
The tarpaulin that covered their pen had been off for several days.</p>
<p>Now observe. I am at the break of the poop, leaning on the rail and watching
Ditman Olansen swing into the top with his cumbersome burden. Mr. Pike,
proceeding aft, has just passed Mr. Mellaire. Possum, who, on account of the
Horn weather and the tarpaulin, has not seen the chickens for many weeks, is
getting reacquainted, and is investigating them with that keen nose of his. And
a hen’s beak, equally though differently keen, impacts on Possum’s
nose, which is as sensitive as it is keen.</p>
<p>I may well say, now that I think it over, that it was this particular hen that
started the mutiny. The men, well-driven by Mr. Pike, were ripe for an
explosion, and Possum and the hen laid the train.</p>
<p>Possum fell away backwards from the coop and loosed a wild cry of pain and
indignation. This attracted Ditman Olansen’s attention. He paused and
craned his neck out in order to see, and, in this moment of carelessness, the
block he was carrying fetched away from him along with the several turns of
rope around his shoulder. Both the mates sprang away to get out from under. The
rope, fast to the block and following it, lashed about like a blacksnake, and,
though the block fell clear of Mr. Mellaire, the bight of the rope snatched off
his cap.</p>
<p>Mr. Pike had already started an oath aloft when his eyes caught sight of the
terrible cleft in Mr. Mellaire’s head. There it was, for all the world to
read, and Mr. Pike’s and mine were the only eyes that could read it. The
sparse hair upon the second mate’s crown served not at all to hide the
cleft. It began out of sight in the thicker hair above the ears, and was
exposed nakedly across the whole dome of head.</p>
<p>The stream of abuse for Ditman Olansen was choked in Mr. Pike’s throat.
All he was capable of for the moment was to stare, petrified, at that enormous
fissure flanked at either end with a thatch of grizzled hair. He was in a
dream, a trance, his great hands knotting and clenching unconsciously as he
stared at the mark unmistakable by which he had said that he would some day
identify the murderer of Captain Somers. And in that moment I remembered having
heard him declare that some day he would stick his fingers in that mark.</p>
<p>Still as in a dream, moving slowly, right hand outstretched like a talon, with
the fingers drawn downward, he advanced on the second mate with the evident
intention of thrusting his fingers into that cleft and of clawing and tearing
at the brain-life beneath that pulsed under the thin film of skin.</p>
<p>The second mate backed away along the bridge, and Mr. Pike seemed partially to
come to himself. His outstretched arm dropped to his side, and he paused.</p>
<p>“I know you,” he said, in a strange, shaky voice, blended of age
and passion. “Eighteen years ago you were dismasted off the Plate in the
<i>Cyrus Thompson</i>. She foundered, after you were on your beam ends and lost
your sticks. You were in the only boat that was saved. Eleven years ago, on the
<i>Jason Harrison</i>, in San Francisco, Captain Somers was beaten to death by
his second mate. This second mate was a survivor of the <i>Cyrus Thompson</i>.
This second mate’d had his skull split by a crazy sea-cook. Your skull is
split. This second mate’s name was Sidney Waltham. And if you ain’t
Sidney Waltham . . . ”</p>
<p>At this point Mr. Mellaire, or, rather, Sidney Waltham, despite his fifty
years, did what only a sailor could do. He went over the bridge-rail side-wise,
caught the running gear up-and-down the mizzen-mast, and landed lightly on his
feet on top of Number Three hatch. Nor did he stop there. He ran across the
hatch and dived through the doorway of his room in the ’midship-house.</p>
<p>Such must have been Mr. Pike’s profundity of passion, that he paused like
a somnambulist, actually rubbed his eyes with the back of his hand, and seemed
to awaken.</p>
<p>But the second mate had not run to his room for refuge. The next moment he
emerged, a thirty-two Smith and Wesson in his hand, and the instant he emerged
he began shooting.</p>
<p>Mr. Pike was wholly himself again, and I saw him perceptibly pause and decide
between the two impulses that tore at him. One was to leap over the bridge-rail
and down at the man who shot at him; the other was to retreat. He retreated.
And as he bounded aft along the narrow bridge the mutiny began. Arthur Deacon,
from the mizzen-top, leaned out and hurled a steel marlin-spike at the fleeing
mate. The thing flashed in the sunlight as it hurtled down. It missed Mr. Pike
by twenty feet and nearly impaled Possum, who, afraid of firearms, was wildly
rushing and ki-yi-ing aft. It so happened that the sharp point of the
marlin-spike struck the wooden floor of the bridge, and it penetrated the
planking with such force that after it had fetched to a standstill it vibrated
violently for long seconds.</p>
<p>I confess that I failed to observe a tithe of what occurred during the next
several minutes. Piece together as I will, after the event, I know that I
missed much of what took place. I know that the men aloft in the mizzen
descended to the deck, but I never saw them descend. I know that the second
mate emptied the chambers of his revolver, but I did not hear all the shots. I
know that Lars Johnson left the wheel, and on his broken leg, rebroken and not
yet really mended, limped and scuttled across the poop, down the ladder, and
gained for’ard. I know he must have limped and scuttled on that bad leg
of his; I know that I must have seen him; and yet I swear that I have no
impression of seeing him.</p>
<p>I do know that I heard the rush of feet of men from for’ard along the
main deck. And I do know that I saw Mr. Pike take shelter behind the steel
jiggermast. Also, as the second mate manoeuvred to port on top of Number Three
hatch for his last shot, I know that I saw Mr. Pike duck around the corner of
the chart-house to starboard and get away aft and below by way of the
booby-hatch. And I did hear that last futile shot, and the bullet also as it
ricochetted from the corner of the steel-walled chart-house.</p>
<p>As for myself, I did not move. I was too interested in seeing. It may have been
due to lack of presence of mind, or to lack of habituation to an active part in
scenes of quick action; but at any rate I merely retained my position at the
break of the poop and looked on. I was the only person on the poop when the
mutineers, led by the second mate and the gangsters, rushed it. I saw them
swarm up the ladder, and it never entered my head to attempt to oppose them.
Which was just as well, for I would have been killed for my pains, and I could
never have stopped them.</p>
<p>I was alone on the poop, and the men were quite perplexed to find no enemy in
sight. As Bert Rhine went past, he half fetched up in his stride, as if to
knife me with the sheath knife, sharp-pointed, which he carried in his right
hand; then, and I know I correctly measured the drift of his judgment, he
unflatteringly dismissed me as unimportant and ran on.</p>
<p>Right here I was impressed by the lack of clear-thinking on any of their parts.
So spontaneously had the ship’s company exploded into mutiny that it was
dazed and confused even while it acted. For instance, in the months since we
left Baltimore there had never been a moment, day or night, even when preventer
tackles were rigged, that a man had not stood at the wheel. So habituated were
they to this, that they were shocked into consternation at sight of the
deserted wheel. They paused for an instant to stare at it. Then Bert Rhine,
with a quick word and gesture, sent the Italian, Guido Bombini, around the rear
of the half-wheelhouse. The fact that he completed the circuit was proof that
nobody was there.</p>
<p>Again, in the swift rush of events, I must confess that I saw but little. I was
aware that more of the men were climbing up the ladder and gaining the poop,
but I had no eyes for them. I was watching that sanguinary group aft near the
wheel and noting the most important thing, namely, that it was Bert Rhine, the
gangster, and not the second mate, who gave orders and was obeyed.</p>
<p>He motioned to the Jew, Isaac Chantz, who had been wounded earlier in the
voyage by O’Sullivan, and Chantz led the way to the starboard chart-house
door. While this was going on, all in flashing fractions of seconds, Bert Rhine
was cautiously inspecting the lazarette through the open booby-hatch.</p>
<p>Isaac Chantz jerked open the chart-house door, which swung outward. Things did
happen so swiftly! As he jerked the iron door open a two-foot hacking butcher
knife, at the end of a withered, yellow hand, flashed out and down on him. It
missed head and neck, but caught him on top of the left shoulder.</p>
<p>All hands recoiled before this, and the Jew reeled across to the rail, his
right hand clutching at his wound, and between the fingers I could see the
blood welling darkly. Bert Rhine abandoned his inspection of the booby-hatch,
and, with the second mate, the latter still carrying his empty Smith &
Wesson, sprang into the press about the chart-house door.</p>
<p>O wise, clever, cautious, old Chinese steward! He made no emergence. The door
swung emptily back and forth to the rolling of the <i>Elsinore</i>, and no man
knew but what, just inside, with that heavy, hacking knife upraised, lurked the
steward. And while they hesitated and stared at the aperture that alternately
closed and opened with the swinging of the door, the booby-hatch, situated
between chart-house and wheel, erupted. It was Mr. Pike, with his .44 automatic
Colt.</p>
<p>There were shots fired, other than by him. I know I heard them, like
“red-heads” at an old-time Fourth of July; but I do not know who
discharged them. All was mess and confusion. Many shots were being fired, and
through the uproar I heard the reiterant, monotonous explosions from the
Colt’s .44</p>
<p>I saw the Italian, Mike Cipriani, clutch savagely at his abdomen and sink
slowly to the deck. Shorty, the Japanese half-caste, clown that he was, dancing
and grinning on the outskirts of the struggle, with a final grimace and
hysterical giggle led the retreat across the poop and down the poop-ladder.
Never had I seen a finer exemplification of mob psychology. Shorty, the most
unstable-minded of the individuals who composed this mob, by his own
instability precipitated the retreat in which the mob joined. When he broke
before the steady discharge of the automatic in the hand of the mate, on the
instant the rest broke with him. Least-balanced, his balance was the balance of
all of them.</p>
<p>Chantz, bleeding prodigiously, was one of the first on Shorty’s heels. I
saw Nosey Murphy pause long enough to throw his knife at the mate. The missile
went wide, with a metallic clang struck the brass tip of one of the spokes of
the <i>Elsinore’s</i> wheel, and clattered on the deck. The second mate,
with his empty revolver, and Bert Rhine with his sheath-knife, fled past me
side by side.</p>
<p>Mr. Pike emerged from the booby-hatch and with an unaimed shot brought down
Bill Quigley, one of the “bricklayers,” who fell at my feet. The
last man off the poop was the Maltese Cockney, and at the top of the ladder he
paused to look back at Mr. Pike, who, holding the automatic in both hands, was
taking careful aim. The Maltese Cockney, disdaining the ladder, leaped through
the air to the main deck. But the Colt merely clicked. It was the last bullet
in it that had fetched down Bill Quigley.</p>
<p>And the poop was ours.</p>
<p>Events still crowded so closely that I missed much. I saw the steward,
belligerent and cautious, his long knife poised for a slash, emerge from the
chart-house. Margaret followed him, and behind her came Wada, who carried my
.22 Winchester automatic rifle. As he told me afterwards, he had brought it up
under instructions from her.</p>
<p>Mr. Pike was glancing with cool haste at his Colt to see whether it was jammed
or empty, when Margaret asked him the course.</p>
<p>“By the wind,” he shouted to her, as he bounded for’ard.
“Put your helm hard up or we’ll be all aback.”</p>
<p>Ah!—yeoman and henchman of the race, he could not fail in his fidelity to
the ship under his command. The iron of all his years of iron training was
there manifest. While mutiny spread red, and death was on the wing, he could
not forget his charge, the ship, the <i>Elsinore</i>, the insensate fabric
compounded of steel and hemp and woven cotton that was to him glorious with
personality.</p>
<p>Margaret waved Wada in my direction as she ran to the wheel. As Mr. Pike passed
the corner of the chart-house, simultaneously there was a report from amidships
and the ping of a bullet against the steel wall. I saw the man who fired the
shot. It was the cowboy, Steve Roberts.</p>
<p>As for the mate, he ducked in behind the sheltering jiggermast, and even as he
ducked his left hand dipped into his side coat-pocket, so that when he had
gained shelter it was coming out with a fresh clip of cartridges. The empty
clip fell to the deck, the loaded clip slipped up the hollow butt, and he was
good for eight more shots.</p>
<p>Wada turned the little automatic rifle over to me, where I still stood under
the weather cloth at the break of the poop.</p>
<p>“All ready,” he said. “You take off safety.”</p>
<p>“Get Roberts,” Mr. Pike called to me. “He’s the best
shot for’ard. If you can’t get ’m, jolt the fear of God into
him anyway.”</p>
<p>It was the first time I had a human target, and let me say, here and now, that
I am convinced I am immune to buck fever. There he was before me, less than a
hundred feet distant, in the gangway between the door to Davis’ room and
the starboard-rail, manoeuvring for another shot at Mr. Pike.</p>
<p>I must have missed Steve Roberts that first time, but I came so near him that
he jumped. The next instant he had located me and turned his revolver on me.
But he had no chance. My little automatic was discharging as fast as I could
tickle the trigger with my fore-finger. The cowboy’s first shot went wild
of me, because my bullet arrived ere he got his swift aim. He swayed and
stumbled backward, but the bullets—ten of them—poured from the
muzzle of my Winchester like water from a garden hose. It was a stream of lead
I played upon him. I shall never know how many times I hit him, but I am
confident that after he had begun his long staggering fall at least three
additional bullets entered him ere he impacted on the deck. And even as he was
falling, aimlessly and mechanically, stricken then with death, he managed twice
again to discharge his weapon.</p>
<p>And after he struck the deck he never moved. I do believe he died in the air.</p>
<p>As I held up my gun and gazed at the abruptly-deserted main-deck I was aware of
Wada’s touch on my arm. I looked. In his hand were a dozen little .22
long, soft-nosed, smokeless cartridges. He wanted me to reload. I threw on the
safety, opened the magazine, and tilted the rifle so that he could let the
fresh cartridges of themselves slide into place.</p>
<p>“Get some more,” I told him.</p>
<p>Scarcely had he departed on the errand when Bill Quigley, who lay at my feet,
created a diversion. I jumped—yes, and I freely confess that I
yelled—with startle and surprise, when I felt his paws clutch my ankles
and his teeth shut down on the calf of my leg.</p>
<p>It was Mr. Pike to the rescue. I understand now the Western hyperbole of
“hitting the high places.” The mate did not seem in contact with
the deck. My impression was that he soared through the air to me, landing
beside me, and, in the instant of landing, kicking out with one of those big
feet of his. Bill Quigley was kicked clear away from me, and the next moment he
was flying overboard. It was a clean throw. He never touched the rail.</p>
<p>Whether Mike Cipriani, who, till then, had lain in a welter, began crawling aft
in quest of safety, or whether he intended harm to Margaret at the wheel, we
shall never know; for there was no opportunity given him to show his purpose.
As swiftly as Mr. Pike could cross the deck with those giant bounds, just that
swiftly was the Italian in the air and following Bill Quigley overside.</p>
<p>The mate missed nothing with those eagle eyes of his as he returned along the
poop. Nobody was to be seen on the main deck. Even the lookout had deserted the
forecastle-head, and the <i>Elsinore</i>, steered by Margaret, slipped a lazy
two knots through the quiet sea. Mr. Pike was apprehensive of a shot from
ambush, and it was not until after a scrutiny of several minutes that he put
his pistol into his side coat-pocket and snarled for’ard:</p>
<p>“Come out, you rats! Show your ugly faces! I want to talk with
you!”</p>
<p>Guido Bombini, gesticulating peaceable intentions and evidently thrust out by
Bert Rhine, was the first to appear. When it was observed that Mr. Pike did not
fire, the rest began to dribble into view. This continued till all were there
save the cook, the two sail-makers, and the second mate. The last to come out
were Tom Spink, the boy Buckwheat, and Herman Lunkenheimer, the good-natured
but simple-minded German; and these three came out only after repeated threats
from Bert Rhine, who, with Nosey Murphy and Kid Twist, was patently in charge.
Also, like a faithful dog, Guido Bombini fawned close to him.</p>
<p>“That will do—stop where you are,” Mr. Pike commanded, when
the crew was scattered abreast, to starboard and to port, of Number Three
hatch.</p>
<p>It was a striking scene. <i>Mutiny on the high seas</i>! That phrase, learned
in boyhood from my Marryatt and Cooper, recrudesced in my brain. This was
it—mutiny on the high seas in the year nineteen thirteen—and I was
part of it, a perishing blond whose lot was cast with the perishing but lordly
blonds, and I had already killed a man.</p>
<p>Mr. Pike, in the high place, aged and indomitable; leaned his arm on the rail
at the break of the poop and gazed down at the mutineers, the like of which
I’ll wager had never been assembled in mutiny before. There were the
three gangsters and ex-jailbirds, anything but seamen, yet in control of this
affair that was peculiarly an affair of the sea. With them was the Italian
hound, Bombini, and beside them were such strangely assorted men as Anton
Sorensen, Lars Jacobsen, Frank Fitzgibbon, and Richard Giller—also Arthur
Deacon the white slaver, John Hackey the San Francisco hoodlum, the Maltese
Cockney, and Tony the suicidal Greek.</p>
<p>I noticed the three strange ones, shouldering together and standing apart from
the others as they swayed to the lazy roll and dreamed with their pale, topaz
eyes. And there was the Faun, stone deaf but observant, straining to understand
what was taking place. Yes, and Mulligan Jacobs and Andy Fay were bitterly and
eagerly side by side, and Ditman Olansen, crank-eyed, as if drawn by some
affinity of bitterness, stood behind them, his head appearing between their
heads. Farthest advanced of all was Charles Davis, the man who by all rights
should long since be dead, his face with its wax-like pallor startlingly in
contrast to the weathered faces of the rest.</p>
<p>I glanced back at Margaret, who was coolly steering, and she smiled to me, and
love was in her eyes—she, too, of the perishing and lordly race of
blonds, her place the high place, her heritage government and command and
mastery over the stupid lowly of her kind and over the ruck and spawn of the
dark-pigmented breeds.</p>
<p>“Where’s Sidney Waltham?” the mate snarled. “I want
him. Bring him out. After that, the rest of you filth get back to work, or God
have mercy on you.”</p>
<p>The men moved about restlessly, shuffling their feet on the deck.</p>
<p>“Sidney Waltham, I want you—come out!” Mr. Pike called,
addressing himself beyond them to the murderer of the captain under whom once
he had sailed.</p>
<p>The prodigious old hero! It never entered his head that he was not the master
of the rabble there below him. He had but one idea, an idea of passion, and
that was his desire for vengeance on the murderer of his old skipper.</p>
<p>“You old stiff!” Mulligan Jacobs snarled back.</p>
<p>“Shut up, Mulligan!” was Bert Rhine’s command, in receipt of
which he received a venomous stare from the cripple.</p>
<p>“Oh, ho, my hearty,” Mr. Pike sneered at the gangster.
“I’ll take care of your case, never fear. In the meantime, and
right now, fetch out that dog.”</p>
<p>Whereupon he ignored the leader of the mutineers and began calling,
“Waltham, you dog, come out! Come out, you sneaking cur! Come out!”</p>
<p><i>Another lunatic</i>, was the thought that flashed through my mind; another
lunatic, the slave of a single idea. He forgets the mutiny, his fidelity to the
ship, in his personal thirst for vengeance.</p>
<p>But did he? Even as he forgot and called his heart’s desire, which was
the life of the second mate, even then, without intention, mechanically, his
sailor’s considerative eye lifted to note the draw of the sails and roved
from sail to sail. Thereupon, so reminded, he returned to his fidelity.</p>
<p>“Well?” he snarled at Bert Rhine. “Go on and get
for’ard before I spit on you, you scum and slum. I’ll give you and
the rest of the rats two minutes to return to duty.”</p>
<p>And the leader, with his two fellow-gangsters, laughed their weird, silent
laughter.</p>
<p>“I guess you’ll listen to our talk, first, old horse,” Bert
Rhine retorted. “—Davis, get up now and show what kind of a spieler
you are. Don’t get cold feet. Spit it out to Foxy Grandpa an’ tell
’m what’s doin’.”</p>
<p>“You damned sea-lawyer!” Mr. Pike snarled as Davis opened his mouth
to speak.</p>
<p>Bert Rhine shrugged his shoulders, and half turned on his heel as if to depart,
as he said quietly:</p>
<p>“Oh, well, if you don’t want to talk . . . ”</p>
<p>Mr. Pike conceded a point.</p>
<p>“Go on!” he snarled. “Spit the dirt out of your system,
Davis; but remember one thing: you’ll pay for this, and you’ll pay
through the nose. Go on!”</p>
<p>The sea-lawyer cleared his throat in preparation.</p>
<p>“First of all, I ain’t got no part in this,” he began.</p>
<p>“I’m a sick man, an’ I oughta be in my bunk right now. I
ain’t fit to be on my feet. But they’ve asked me to advise
’em on the law, an’ I have advised ’em—”</p>
<p>“And the law—what is it?” Mr. Pike broke in.</p>
<p>But Davis was uncowed.</p>
<p>“The law is that when the officers is inefficient, the crew can take
charge peaceably an’ bring the ship into port. It’s all law
an’ in the records. There was the <i>Abyssinia</i>, in eighteen
ninety-two, when the master’d died of fever and the mates took to
drinkin’—”</p>
<p>“Go on!” Mr. Pike shut him off. “I don’t want your
citations. What d’ye want? Spit it out.”</p>
<p>“Well—and I’m talkin’ as an outsider, as a sick man off
duty that’s been asked to talk—well, the point is our skipper was a
good one, but he’s gone. Our mate is violent, seekin’ the life of
the second mate. We don’t care about that. What we want is to get into
port with our lives. An’ our lives is in danger. We ain’t hurt
nobody. You’ve done all the bloodshed. You’ve shot an’ killed
an’ thrown two men overboard, as witnesses’ll testify to in court.
An’ there’s Roberts, there, dead, too, an’ headin’ for
the sharks—an’ what for? For defendin’ himself from murderous
an’ deadly attack, as every man can testify an’ tell the truth, the
whole truth, an’ nothin’ but the truth, so help ’m,
God—ain’t that right, men?”</p>
<p>A confused murmur of assent arose from many of them.</p>
<p>“You want my job, eh?” Mr. Pike grinned. “An’ what are
you goin’ to do with me?”</p>
<p>“You’ll be taken care of until we get in an’ turn you over to
the lawful authorities,” Davis answered promptly. “Most likely you
can plead insanity an’ get off easy.”</p>
<p>At this moment I felt a stir at my shoulder. It was Margaret, armed with the
long knife of the steward, whom she had put at the wheel.</p>
<p>“You’ve got another guess comin’, Davis,” Mr. Pike
said. “I’ve got no more talk with you. I’m goin’ to
talk to the bunch. I’ll give you fellows just two minutes to choose, and
I’ll tell you your choices. You’ve only got two choices.
You’ll turn the second mate over to me an’ go back to duty and take
what’s comin’ to you, or you’ll go to jail with the stripes
on you for long sentences. You’ve got two minutes. The fellows that want
jail can stand right where they are. The fellows that don’t want jail and
are willin’ to work faithful, can walk right back to me here on the poop.
Two minutes, an’ you can keep your jaws stopped while you think over what
it’s goin’ to be.”</p>
<p>He turned his head to me and said in an undertone, “Be ready with that
pop-gun for trouble. An’ don’t hesitate. Slap it into
’em—the swine that think they can put as raw a deal as this over on
us.”</p>
<p>It was Buckwheat who made the first move; but so tentative was it that it got
no farther than a tensing of the legs and a sway forward of the shoulders.
Nevertheless it was sufficient to start Herman Lunkenheimer, who thrust out his
foot and began confidently to walk aft. Kid Twist gained him in a single
spring, and Kid Twist, his wrist under the German’s throat from behind;
his knee pressed into the German’s back, bent the man backward and held
him. Even as the rifle came to my shoulder, the hound Bombini drew his knife
directly beneath Kid Twist’s wrist across the up-stretched throat of the
man.</p>
<p>It was at this instant that I heard Mr. Pike’s “Plug him!”
and pulled the trigger; and of all ungodly things the bullet missed and caught
the Faun, who staggered back, sat down on the hatch, and began to cough. And
even as he coughed he still strained with pain-eloquent eyes to try to
understand.</p>
<p>No other man moved. Herman Lunkenheimer, released by Kid Twist, sank down on
the deck. Nor did I shoot again. Kid Twist stood again by the side of Bert
Rhine and Guido Bombini fawned near.</p>
<p>Bert Rhine actually visibly smiled.</p>
<p>“Any more of you guys want to promenade aft?” he queried in velvet
tones.</p>
<p>“Two minutes up,” Mr. Pike declared.</p>
<p>“An’ what are you goin’ to do about it, Grandpa?” Bert
Rhine sneered.</p>
<p>In a flash the big automatic was out of the mate’s pocket and he was
shooting as fast as he could pull trigger, while all hands fled to shelter.
But, as he had long since told me, he was no shot and could effectively use the
weapon only at close range—muzzle to stomach preferably.</p>
<p>As we stared at the main deck, deserted save for the dead cowboy on his back
and for the Faun who still sat on the hatch and coughed, an eruption of men
occurred over the for’ard edge of the ’midship-house.</p>
<p>“Shoot!” Margaret cried at my back.</p>
<p>“Don’t!” Mr. Pike roared at me.</p>
<p>The rifle was at my shoulder when I desisted. Louis, the cook, led the rush aft
to us across the top of the house and along the bridge. Behind him, in single
file and not wasting any time, came the Japanese sail-makers, Henry the
training-ship boy, and the other boy Buckwheat. Tom Spink brought up the rear.
As he came up the ladder of the ’midship-house somebody from beneath must
have caught him by a leg in an effort to drag him back. We saw half of him in
sight and knew that he was struggling and kicking. He fetched clear abruptly,
gained the top of the house in a surge, and raced aft along the bridge until he
overtook and collided with Buckwheat, who yelled out in fear that a mutineer
had caught him.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />